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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/32613
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Title: | Secular variations of magma source compositions in the North Patagonian batholith from the Jurassic to Tertiary: Was mélange melting involved? |
Authors: | Castro, A. Rodriguez, C. Fernandez, C. Aragon, E. Pereira, M.F. Molina, J.F. |
Keywords: | Magmatism Magma sources Subduction zone North patagonian batholith |
Issue Date: | 2021 |
Publisher: | The Geological Society of America |
Citation: | Castro, A., Rodriguez, C., Fernández, C., Aragón, E., Pereira, M.F., Molina, J.F., (2021). Secular variations of magma source compositions in the North Patagonian batholith from the Jurassic to Tertiary: Was mélange melting involved? GEOSPHERE, 17 (3): 766–785. |
Abstract: | This study of Sr-Nd initial isotopic ratios of plutons from the North Patago nian batholith (Argentina and Chile) revealed that a secular evolution spanning
180 m.y., from the Jurassic to Neogene, can be established in terms of magma
sources, which in turn are correlated with changes in the tectonic regime. The
provenance and composition of end-member components in the source of mag mas are represented by the Sr-Nd initial isotopic ratios (87Sr/86Sr and 143Nd/144Nd)
of the plutonic rocks. Our results support the interpretation that source compo sition was determined by incorporation of varied crustal materials and trench
sediments via subduction erosion and sediment subduction into a subduction
channel mélange. Subsequent melting of subducted mélanges at mantle depths
and eventual reaction with the ultramafic mantle are proposed as the main causes
of batholith magma generation, which was favored during periods of fast conver gence and high obliquity between the involved plates. We propose that a parental
diorite (= andesite) precursor arrived at the lower arc crust, where it underwent
fractionation to yield the silicic melts (granodiorites and granites) that formed
the batholiths. The diorite precursor could have been in turn fractionated from
a more mafic melt of basaltic andesite composition, which was formed within
the mantle by complete reaction of the bulk mélanges and the peridotite. Our
proposal follows model predictions on the formation of mélange diapirs that
carry fertile subducted materials into hot regions of the suprasubduction mantle
wedge, where mafic parental magmas of batholiths originate. This model not
only accounts for the secular geochemical variations of Andean batholiths, but it
also avoids a fundamental paradox of the classical basalt model: the absence of
ultramafic cumulates in the lower arc crust and in the continental crust in general. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/32613 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | ICT - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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